The International Finance Corporation (IFC), a member of the World Bank Group, plans to resume cooperation with MHP, Ukraine’s largest chicken producer, and provide a loan of up to $30 million to its subsidiary Vinnytsia Poultry Farm LLC to finance the modernization and expansion of the plant’s biomethane production capacity from agricultural waste.
According to the IFC website, the corporation’s board of directors plans to consider this project at a meeting on September 19 this year.
It is noted that the company already operates two biogas plants to process manure from its farms into green energy. As part of its decarbonization strategy, MHP plans to increase biomethane production in Ukraine by modernizing and expanding the capacity of its biogas plants in several stages. The first stage, which will be financed under the project, will serve to demonstrate the viability of liquefied biomethane production.
The total cost of the project is estimated at $52 million, and in addition to the IFC loan, MHP expects to finance it with its own funds. It is also expected that the project will be supported by a $15 million guarantee from the European Fund for Sustainable Development Plus, the UK, and other donors.
It is specified that the construction is planned at a biogas plant in the village of Vasylivka (Haisyn district, Vinnytsia region), which was launched in 2019 and is the largest such plant in Ukraine with a capacity of 12 MW.
At the first stage of the project, it is planned to modernize the existing facilities to produce 14 thousand tons of liquefied biomethane per year, and at the second stage – to expand the capacity to 20.5 MW.
IFC specifies that if approved by the board of directors, this will be the corporation’s sixth investment in MHP since 2003, the last of which was opened in 2014 and closed in 2019.
The corporation also points out that since 2018, members of local communities, with the support of a number of environmental organizations, have complained about the investments of IFC and the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development to the CAO (Compliance Advisor Ombudsman). As noted in the CAO’s materials, despite the efforts of all parties, no final solution was found.
In February 2022, the CAO published its final report and referred the case to the Compliance Department. After the case was suspended in Ukraine in March 2022 due to the full-scale war against Ukraine launched by Russia, the CAO resumed its work on the case on October 17 after consultations with stakeholders.
MHP is the largest chicken producer in Ukraine. It also produces grain, sunflower oil, and processed meat products. MHP supplies chilled chicken half-carcasses to the European market, which are processed, in particular, at its facilities in the Netherlands and Slovakia. In February 2019, the holding completed the acquisition of the Slovenian company Perutnina Ptuj.
The founder, majority shareholder and chairman of the board of MHP is Ukrainian businessman Yuriy Kosyuk.
In the first quarter of 2023, MHP’s revenue increased by 34.7% compared to the first quarter of 2022 to $745.60 million, and net profit amounted to $49.07 million against a net loss of $108.25 million (with a foreign exchange gain of $4.18 million against a foreign exchange loss of $95.32 million).